Your Right to Know

The economy and which candidate had the best chance to beat President Barack Obama were some of
the main concerns cited by Ohio Republicans voting on Super Tuesday in the GOP presidential
primary.

They appeared split on which candidate could best represent their interests and those of the
country at large, while some seemed less than enthusiastic about their choices in the closely
watched race.

Don Ryan, 71, voted at a polling location in Anderson Township in suburban Cincinnati. Ryan,
who is retired, said he voted for Mitt Romney because he thinks he has the best chance to beat
Obama.

“He has less baggage than the others and more money to help him against Obama,” Ryan said.

He said he would have liked to see other candidates in the GOP field and that he is not sure
Romney is really conservative, but he wants a nominee selected.

“I was ready for it to be over in November,” he said.

Mike Reardon, 45, an aircraft mechanic voting in suburban North Royalton in Cleveland, said
he voted for Rick Santorum despite concerns about whether Santorum can beat Obama. “Me, I want to
get Obama out of there,” said Reardon, who believes Obama has a socialist agenda.

Josh Brooks of Columbus said he had considered voting for Romney but former House Speaker
Newt Gingrich won him over with his energy plan for lowering gas prices.

Nancy Beck Doak, a 52-year-old aquatics instructor voting in suburban Cincinnati, said she
voted on a school issue but ignored the presidential race.

“I don’t care for any of them, Republicans or Democrats,” she said.

Voters have other choices to make in the primary. Those include an unusual match of two
Democratic U.S. House members pushed together under congressional redistricting and a contested
primary for the Republican nominee to oppose Democratic U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown. There also are two
judges competing on the Democratic side to challenge an Ohio Supreme Court justice and numerous
candidates seeking legislative seats.

In state races, there are 14 Democratic and 18 Republican primaries for House seats, and
three Republican primaries for Senate seats. There also were some 100 local school issues are on
ballots across the state.

Few early problems with voting were reported today, with some areas reporting light turnout
that appeared to pick up as the day went on.

Romney and Santorum devoted most of their campaigning to Ohio in the last days before the
10-state primary voting. Romney was looking for a decisive victory, while Santorum hoped to regain
momentum. Gingrich also was hoping to pick up some delegates but was counting on a possible win in
Georgia to spur a comeback.

Some Ohio voters who described themselves as independent weren’t impressed with anyone in the
Republican field.

“It’s going to make me vote Democratic,” said Chuck Horning, a 47-year-old accountant and one
of the earliest voters at a polling site in the Cincinnati suburb of Anderson Township, a heavily
Republican area.

He said he was so disappointed that he voted only on local issues, not in the presidential
primary.

“It is a painful process this year,” he said. “I don’t like the way the Republicans have gone
after each other, and the Democrats aren’t any better.”

Ohioans are used to their state, with its geographic and economic diversity, being closely
watched in elections. No Republican nominee has reached the White House without carrying the swing
state. Obama carried the state in 2008, after the state went for George W. Bush in 2004.

Lying between Romney’s native Michigan and Santorum’s home state of Pennsylvania, Ohio
appeared to be a toss-up in recent polls.

Polls have tracked voter volatility among Ohio Republicans, and late polls also indicated
that significant numbers of likely Ohio primary voters said they might change their minds once they
were casting their ballots.